Intel Flash 36 reports
Breaking preparedness intelligence — curated and analyzed by Morgan Reed.
ABC News NOAA Issues Geomagnetic Storm Watch After Rare Solar Flares
NOAA has issued a strong geomagnetic storm watch following rare solar flare activity. This is an active threat window — know what systems are at risk and what to monitor.
AI Generated — EMPSurvive.com M9.3 Solar Flares from AR 4455 Launch Earth-Directed CMEs
Two major solar flares erupted from Active Region 4455 on June 3, 2026, sending coronal mass ejections toward Earth. NOAA monitoring shows current radiation conditions remain below S-scale thresholds, but the risk window extends through June 5.
The Watchers X1.0 Solar Flare from Region 4455 Triggers R3 Radio Blackouts
An X1.0 solar flare erupted from Active Region 4455 on June 3, 2026, producing strong radio blackout conditions across the sunlit side of Earth. This is the signal to watch HF communications and grid monitoring systems closely.
NASA Science NASA Observes Strong Solar Flare — Monitor for Coronal Mass Ejection Follow-up
NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured a strong solar flare peaking at 7:28 a.m. ET on June 3, 2026. The critical next indicator: whether a coronal mass ejection accompanied the event and its trajectory toward Earth.
NOAA Issues G2 Geomagnetic Storm Watch for Early Next Week
NOAA has issued a G2 geomagnetic storm watch ahead of early next week, driven by elevated solar wind conditions. This is a medium-severity alert with real infrastructure implications for power grids, satellite operations, and communications systems.
AI Generated — EMPSurvive.com NOAA: G1-G2 Geomagnetic Storm Possible May 18-19 from CME Glancing Blow
NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center is tracking a coronal mass ejection that left the sun May 16 and may deliver a glancing blow to Earth's magnetosphere this weekend. Minor geomagnetic storm conditions (G1-G2) are possible, with aurora visible in far northern latitudes.
AI Generated — EMPSurvive.com Geomagnetic Storm Peak Saturday: NOAA Forecasts Aurora Display Across North America
A moderate geomagnetic storm is moving across North America this weekend, with peak intensity expected Saturday night. NOAA has confirmed the event—here's what you need to know about timing, visibility, and what happens when solar activity affects your region.
AI Generated — EMPSurvive.com G1-G2 Geomagnetic Storm Underway: Solar Wind Impact Confirmed
NOAA has confirmed G1 (minor) and G2 (moderate) geomagnetic storming following strong solar wind arrival on May 16. This is the first multi-tier storm activity of the current solar cycle phase—watch for grid and communications stress.
AI Generated — EMPSurvive.com Geomagnetic Storm Watch: Aurora Visible South, HF Disruptions Likely
A solar stream is expected to hit Earth's magnetic field this weekend, potentially triggering weak to minor geomagnetic disturbances. NOAA space-weather forecasters are monitoring for HF radio impacts on the sunlit side of the planet.